
Essentialism
by Greg McKeown · 2014
Do less, but better. The disciplined pursuit of the vital few over the trivial many.
Worth reading? The best book on doing less that you'll actually finish, and it beats Getting Things Done for people whose real problem is saying yes. McKeown's "vital few over the trivial many" framework is simple enough to stick. Skip it if your trouble is starting things, not stopping them — this won't light a fire under you.
| Author | Greg McKeown |
|---|---|
| Published | 2014 |
| Category | Self-Improvement & Psychology |
The Verdict
McKeown’s rule: if it isn’t a clear yes, it’s a clear no. The book teaches trade-off thinking, graceful ways to decline, and how to cut good options to protect great ones. It repeats itself (ironic, for a book about less), but the core discipline sticks. Pairs naturally with Deep Work: this decides what matters, that protects the time for it.
overcommitted people who say yes by default and pay for it
your problem is starting things, not stopping them
Book Summary
You can do anything, but not everything — and the disciplined pursuit of the vital few beats frantic coverage of the trivial many every time. Essentialism is a system: explore, eliminate, and execute, with real trade-offs made on purpose instead of by default. If you feel overworked but underutilized, the fix isn't better time management — it's a brutally honest filter on what deserves your attention at all.
Top 7 Lessons from Essentialism
- Trade-offs are real; you can't have it all, so choose the one thing that matters.
- Say no gracefully and early instead of yes by default and late.
- Protect your time like a fixed asset with a 'sleep' and a 'play' buffer.
- The 90-percent rule: if it's not a clear yes, it's a no.
- Eliminate the nonessential so the essential has room to win.
- Make your highest contribution, not your highest activity.
- Ask 'what's the one thing I must do?' before the day starts.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Essentialism worth reading?
Yes, if you're overcommitted and say yes by default. Skip it if your problem is starting things, not stopping them — this book is about cutting, not igniting.
What is the main idea of Essentialism?
Do less, but better: systematically figure out what's absolutely essential, then eliminate everything else so you contribute where it counts.
How long does it take to read Essentialism?
Roughly 4 to 5 hours across its 272 pages.
Who should read Essentialism?
Overcommitted people who say yes by default and pay for it. Skip it if your problem is starting things, not stopping them.
Ready to read it?
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